Atractaspididae
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11 genera, see article. |
Atractaspididae is a small, unusual group of advanced snakes, often called mole vipers or stilleto snakes. Recently, molecular evidence has shown that this family includes many genera formerly classed in other families, on the basis of fang type. This odd family of snakes seems to include fangless (aglyphous), rear-fanged (opisthoglyphous), fixed-fanged (proteroglyphous), and viper-like (solenoglyphous) species. Molecular and physiological data linking this family to others is ambiguous and often contradictory, which means the taxonomy of this family is highly contentious. The nominate family, Atractaspididae has itself been moved to and from other taxa, reinforcing the ambiguity of this family. There are currently 11 accepted genera in the family:
- Amblyodipsas
- Aparallactus
- Atractaspis
- Brachyophis
- Chilorhinophis
- Elapotinus
- Hypoptophis
- Macrelaps
- Micrelaps
- Polemon
- Xenocalamus
The most well-known (and most lethal) of this family is the genus Atractaspis itself, which contains 18 species of small African snake with fangs that, rather than swinging forward like those of a viper, swing outward to the sides, allowing the snake to strike with its mouth closed by swinging its head. This odd behavior has resulted in the accidental envenomation of herpetologists, including Mark O'Shea, whose accidental bite was caught on film while taping for his TV show, as was his subsequent rush to the nearest hospital. He survived, but others have not been so fortunate in the past.
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